Meet the NYC cabbie-turned-judge overseeing Trump’s ‘corporate death penalty’ civil fraud trial
By Shannon Thaler
Published Oct. 2, 2023, 10:25 a.m. ET
Before Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron weighed in on the future of Donald Trump’s business empire, did a stint as a New York City cabbie to make ends meet.
While getting his undergraduate degree from Columbia University in the ’60s, Engoron drove a taxi cab — a job he later said was his third-favorite after being a law clerk and sitting on the bench.
“I loved the freedom, the instant cash, getting to meet people, learning how to drive like a maniac without being caught,” he said back in 2012 after hearing arguments from the taxi industry urging him to block then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s outer-borough street-hail plan.
The Democratic judge revealed himself in another decision as a free-speech absolutist who has been a member of the American Civil Liberties Union since 1994, and has participated in “huge, sometimes boisterous, Vietnam War protests,” according to Fortune.

He also played taught piano and drum lessons, and played the keyboard in a “moderately-successful” bar band, the outlet reported.
These days, Engoron is making upwards of $200,000 per year as a New York state Supreme Court justice, and living in the affluent Long Island village of Great Neck with his third wife and four children.
Last week, Engoron found Trump, 77, his family and his business, the Trump Organization, liable for fraud — the key claim in New York Attorney General Letitia James’ sprawling, $250 million lawsuit against the defendants.
more
https://nypost.com/2023/10/02/judge-overseeing-trumps-civil-fraud-trial-was-once-nyc-cabbie/